Alternative hip hop (
Bohemian hip hop) is a
style of
hip hop distinguished by socio-political lyrics, sparse beats that
sample few and/or unusual sources (see
jazz rap) and uniquely positive rhymes. Alternative hip hop artists generally have not achieved much or any mainstream success, although they are often critically acclaimed.
Interestingly, alternative hip hop has developed differently from virtually every other musical genre, with its originators (De La Soul, A Tribe Called Quest) being more popular than later innovators (Guru, Mos Def).
The late 1980s
Alternative hip hop is usually said to have begun with
De La Soul's landmark
3 Feet High and Rising (
1989,
1989 in music). The trio's distinctive style, mixing unique sampling sources (such as
The Turtles and
Johnny Cash) with spacey,
hippie-ish lyrics and a sense of humor, made the album a commercial and critical success. The album also foreshadowed the self-referential
sampling kaleidoscope that would soon envelope hip hop (and pop music in general), with its inclusion of pre-recorded bits from outlandish sources, such as a
French language instruction tape.
In addition to 3 Feet High and Rising, influential singles were released one year previously, in 1988 (see 1988 in music), by Gang Starr ("Words I Manifest") and Stetsasonic ("Talkin' All That Jazz"); these two singles fused hip hop with jazz in a way never done before, and helped lead to the development of jazz rap.
1989 also saw the release of:
All four of these albums helped establish the Native Tongues Posse, a group of Afrocentric hip hop artists idealogically inspired by Afrika Bambaataa's Universal Zulu Nation.
Early 1990s
During the early 1990s, mainstream hip hop was dominated by the West Coast sound (like Dr. Dre and Snoop Doggy Dogg). Other artists found success difficult to achieve, though some East Coast acts, such as Puff Daddy's empire of East Coast hip hop artists (Bad Boy Records) gained chart success (Mary J. Blige' 1992 What's the 411?) as well as critical success (Nas' 1994 Illmatic), though rarely both at the same time.
While gangsta rap dominated the charts, alternative hip hop developed underground in the early 90s. West Coast artists like
The Pharcyde (
Bizarre Ride II the Pharcyde[?],
1992) and the
Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy (
Hypocrisy Is the Greatest Luxury[?],
1992) rose to prominence in the field. Alongside these West Coast groups were generally more popular East Coast groups like
A Tribe Called Quest (
People's Instinctive Travels and Paths of Rhythm[?],
1990) and
Gang Starr (
Step in the Arena[?],
1991). International groups, like Britain's
The Brand New Heavies (
Heavy Rhyme Experience, Vol. 1[?],
1992) and
Massive Attack (
Blue Lines,
1991) helped combine hip hop with
R&B and
electronica, respectively.
Alternative hip hop's incendiary and confrontational politics began causing occasional controversy, with Brand Nubian's One for All[?] even being accused of reverse racism[?]. X-Clan's To the East, Blackwards[?] was similarly criticized. Paris's "Bush Killa" (from Sleeping With the Enemy[?], 1993), which denounced the Gulf War and then-President Bush, brought the genre some publicity, both positive and negative.
A Tribe Called Quest's 1991 album The Low-End Theory is regarded as one of the most influential recordings in alternative hip hop, especially with its timely indictment of the perceived commercializing and demoralizing effects of the music industry, then tearing hip hop apart into multiple competing genres, all rushing to sell out for mainstream success; the album also tackles subjects like date rape and rap feuds. The Low End Theory includes the virtuoso upright bassist Ron Carter and the Leaders of the New School (which included future superstar Busta Rhymes).
While A Tribe Called Quest and De La Soul are considered jazz-rappers, the pioneer of an actual fusion between the two genres is usually said to be Guru, whose 1993 Jazzmatazz, Vol. 1 was a critically acclaimed solo debut with live jazz backing. A jazz band including Lonnie Liston Smith[?], Roy Ayers[?], Branford Marsalis and Donald Byrd solos in the background while Guru (and guests like the Senegalese-Frenchman MC Solaar) raps.
Stubbornly insisting on sticking to their themes and ideas, alternative hip hop artists were able to incorporate elements of virtually every form of music around at the time.
Meanwhile,
Christian hip hop group and pioneering
Southern rap crew
Arrested Development scored big with
1992's
3 Years, 5 Months and 2 Days in the Life of... (which put Southern hip hop on the map). The album was particularly successful with non-hip hop fans, listeners who were turned off by the macho posturing of many other groups, and who wanted a safer alternative. Arrested Development's focus on peace and love and groovy beats made them relatively accessible, though their devout
Christianity (reflected in the lyrics) also made them unattractive to some audiences.
Hardcore artists like Basehead (Play With Toys[?], 1992) and jazzy Afrocentrists like Poor Righteous Teachers (Pure Poverty[?], 1991) continued innovating an alternative to pop hip hop in the early part of the decade, mixing in rapcore and heavy metal influences alongside bebop, doo wop and the blues.
Canadian duo the Dream Warriors (And Now, the Legacy Begins[?], 1991) and West Coast group Digital Underground (Sex Packets[?], 1990) helped bring De La Soul's humor to the emerging genre.
Other genres sometimes labelled alternative hip hop
Alternative hip hop generally refers to a specific style of hip hop that is opposed to the mainstream sounds of gangsta rap. However, certain other hip hop genres are also alternative and are sometimes referred to with the same term, including a mixture of heavy metal, hard rock and hip hop that would eventually come to be known as rapcore, and a mixture of 1970s-style soul music and hip hop called nu soul.
Rapcore was popularized by groups like
Limp Bizkit (
Significant Other[?],
1999),
Kid Rock (
Devil Without a Cause[?],
1998) and
Linkin Park (
Hybrid Theory,
2000) though the style had already lost most of its critical viability by the end of the 90s. This fusion was invented in the early part of the decade, drawing on influences like
thrash metal groups like
Anthrax (
Persistence of Time),
Ice-T (
Body Count[?]) and
Rage Against the Machine (
Rage Against the Machine). The earliest artists to mix rock and hip hop were
Run-D.M.C. (
King of Rock[?],
1985) and the
Beastie Boys (
Paul's Boutique,
1989).
Hip hop also influenced
soul music in the 1990s. By the time hip hop began to enter the mainstream, soul music was rapidly losing its most legendary artists. While
Michael Jackson,
Prince,
Tina Turner and
Whitney Houston remained popular, the genre was seen as stunted and atrophied. Soon after, hip hop began to dominate what mainstream audiences thought of as
African-American music with the release of
Dr. Dre's blockbuster
The Chronic. Soul music became drastically unpopular, with the few groups achieving commercial success mostly failing to find critical acclaim. The groups that did succeed incorporated hip hop beats and
doo wop influences; these include
Blackstreet Another Level[?],
1996) and
Boyz II Men (
Cooleyhighharmony[?],
1991).
Mary J. Blige's
What's the 411? from
1992 was especially innovative. During the mid- to late 90s, the hip hop beats became more pronounced and resulted in
nu soul. Widely regarded as a pioneer of the genre,
D'Angelo's
1995 Brown Sugar[?] is profoundly influential in its development, while a group of female artists like
Erykah Badu (
Baduizm,
1997),
Lauryn Hill (
The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill,
1998) and
Macy Gray (
On How Life Is[?],
1999) began its popularization soon after. Around and immediately after the turn of the decade, a second wave of female artists moved nu soul into the mainstream, especially
Alicia Keys'
Songs in A Minor[?] (
2001), as well as
india.arie[?]'s
Acoustic Soul[?] (
2001) and
Jill Scott[?]'s
Who Is Jill Scott?: Words and Sounds, Vol. 1[?] (
2000). Critical reviews were mixed, with many listeners feeling that nu soul had lost its pioneering edge for middle-class shallow idealism.
The end of the 1990s
In spite of nu soul and rapcore gaining mainstream acceptance, gangsta hip hop artists like Jay-Z (Reasonable Doubt[?], 1999) and DMX (...And Then There Was X[?], 1999) still dominated the charts as the end of the millennium neared. Critics and listeners regarded alternative hip hop as going through a lull, as even mainstays like A Tribe Called Quest (Beats, Rhymes and Life[?], 1996) released lackluster albums.
Many observers feel that
Dr. Octagon's seminal
1996 album
Dr. Octagonecologyst[?] revitalized hip hop's underground;
Company Flow's
Funcrusher Plus[?] is another album cited as redefining the genre. Alternative hip hop soon began to lose its recent stylings for a return to
Native Tongues-style
old school with
hardcore and
jazz elements mixed in.
Mos Def and
Talib Kweli's
1998 Black Star did much to contribute to this evolution, with its return to Native Tongues-style old school hip hop. Mos Def's solo debut,
Black on Both Sides (
1999), quickly established him as a darling of alternative media for its incendiary politics, while Kweli's solo career took some time to get off the ground; as he didn't appear until
2000's
Reflection Eternal, with partner
Hi-Tek.
Pharaoh Monch's
Internal Affairs[?], his 1999 solo debut after leaving
Organized Konfusion, also added more gangsta and hardcore hip hop elements to the mix, while
Jurassic 5 (
Jurassic 5 EP[?]),
Blackalicious (
NIA[?]) and
Dilated Peoples (
The Platform[?]) continued mixing
hippie-ish
psychedelia,
funk and
hip hop to critical acclaim and popular rejection.
Post-2000 alternative hip hop
After the turn of the millennium, as the United States (still by far the world capital of hip hop) found itself confronted by the War on Terror, lyrics grew increasingly anti-mainstream, with some advocating radical actions on the behalf of various anarchist and socialist ideas. The Coup's album cover for Party Music[?] (2001) proved controversial after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks due to its depiction of the duo holding a stick of dynamite and a detonator, ready to blow up the World Trade Center; other groups like Dead Prez (Let's Get Free, 2000) similarly raised controversy for militant and confrontational lyrics.
In 2001 and 2002, several surprisingly popular albums were released. These included:
See also: list of alternative rappers
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